The Cost Of Recalling Our Parliament For Two Days Is Crazy

What you might not realise, though, is that the announcement means our politicians get an early mark from the parliament; and just two days in Canberra for our political leaders have cost you, the taxpayer, almost $1.4 million.

The opposition started calling it the "Seinfeld parliament" -- "the parliament about nothing". Labor MP Tim Watts even launched into an impromptu jazz-scat version of the sitcom's theme tune on the floor of the House.

But jokes aside, the anti-climactic and premature end to the extraordinary sitting session is an expensive episode.

A spokesman for Bill Shorten's office told The Huffington Post Australia that the 226 politicians recalled to Canberra each get a $271 per night travel allowance, while another 226 travel allowances at $263 each are given for their staff. Another $941 each is reserved for return flights to Canberra for those 452 people.

Travel allowances and flights for the short-lived sitting session, assuming they all arrived on Sunday and leave on Wednesday morning (three nights) would come out to around $787,400.

Adding on figures released to Labor by the Parliamentary Library, which estimates costs for recalling a day of Parliament in a non-sitting week at around $300,000 a day, that figure comes out to about $1.39 million. The cost could be even higher than that, with Fairfax Media reporting last month that it could cost up to $1 million per day to recall the parliament. We'll go forward with our relatively conservative figure.

The House sat for 12 hours on Monday and for just three hours on Tuesday, while the Senate sat for 13 hours on Monday and will also sit from midday to around 7pm on Tuesday -- a total of 35 hours between both houses. That comes out to a cost of $39,714 per hour of parliament sitting.